Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 7

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
EN
In the article the author examines the most important strategies of the linguistic fight against the Nazi propaganda employed by the underground press published by political parties active in the Polish Underground State during the Second World War. A theoretical introduction contains an outline of the model of political communication under German occupation (1939–1945) as well as the most important functions of articles that could be placed between political propaganda and wartime propaganda.
EN
The author of the article examines strategies used to belittle political opponents in the underground press published in Poland in 1939–1945. It turns out that the language of political propaganda in the period had many communication strategies employed in the fight against political rivals, often regarded as enemies. The author presents examples of how political invectives were used in a very important period of power struggle among political parties operating in the underground.
EN
The author of the article describes the ways of conceptualizing Nazi totalitarian propaganda during the Second World War (1939–1945) in occupied Poland. This totalitarian discourse created many defense mechanisms on the level of colloquial knowledge, humor directed against the occupant, and was the object of counter-propaganda activities conducted by Polish underground organizations. This article describes a fragment of the “anti-totalitarian discourse” that emerges from the diaries and journals of the period described.
Mäetagused
|
2013
|
vol. 53
55–76
EN
This article is a survey of the most important communicative phenomena in the contemporary Polish political humour. It is also an attempt to describe political humour from a theoretical point of view and to compare it with political jokes from a period of the Polish People’s Republic (PRL). This article mainly describes amusing statements of contemporary politicians that were primarily used as the means of a political polemic, and secondarily after having been popularised by journalists (due to their comic content), achieved a status of “winged words” and appeared in various intertextual variants of the public and colloquial discourse.
EN
The author of the article has two research objectives. The first one is to describe and analyse the main persuasion strategies used in multimodal TV features. The article provides an outline of the genre reflecting anthropological and cultural patterns of the contemporary media discourse (i.a. pursuit of the sensational, tabloid stylistics and persuasiveness of information). The article also highlights some aspects, changes and tendencies in transmission and reception of the media text, in which verbal components have been eliminated by visual components. The second purpose of the article is to overview verbal and non-verbal (visual) forms of persuasion in TV features (e.g. preparing TV programmes by reporters, and value of negative facts and news from social life). That part of the article is a case study of the Polish TV feature entitled “Uwaga”.
EN
The author of the article has two research objectives. The first one is to describe and analyse main strategies of popularization of science in Polish press 1918–1939. The article also highlights some aspects, tendencies and reception of media text (media discourse): picture of the world of science and achievements, strategies used by journalists to write about difficult topics (e.g. translating difficult problems into easier stylistic form), used by them rules of “Plain Language”. The second purpose of the article is to overview historical, cultural context and hidden implications (persuasive strategies) in the public discourse about the role of science in Poland before the Second World War.
EN
The article consists of two parts. In the first part, the author of the article describes the history of the concept of totalitarianism and words used in the semantic field of that lexeme. In the theoretical fragments, the author describes the phenomenon of lexicographical and semantic researches on the word totalitarianism (also presents a history of that important word from the political vocabulary). The second part of the article is empirical. The author presents examples of how lexical meanings of totalitarianism were used in a very important period of history and a very important period for that word. The article describes the process of beginning to name totalitarianism and the semantic process of that concept during the Second World War.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.